Liverpool and Everton draw 0-0 in 220th Merseyside derby

Liverpool's Steven Gerrard and Leon Osman of Everton battle it out in the 220th Merseyside derby

Liverpool FC and Everton cancelled each other out in a forgettable 220th Merseyside derby bereft of incident.

The draw may have strengthened Everton FC’s chances of finishing above their near-neighbours for the second successive season - something which has not happened since 1937 - but they rarely came close to ending a 14-year winless run at Anfield.

Midfielder Marouane Fellaini had the visitors’ best chance, volleying wide from close range in the first half, while Liverpool FC captain Steven Gerrard saw Sylvain Distin clear off the line after the break.

However, just three bookings in a game which has seen 20 red cards in the previous 41 meetings indicated a lack of bite.

Sixth-placed Everton, five points ahead of their near-neighbours, did not have enough in their locker to end their drought on enemy territory and Jamie Carragher, on his 30th and final Merseyside derby before retirement, had one of his quieter afternoons.

Similarly, without Luis Suarez the Reds struggled to break down an Everton defence which was brilliantly marshalled by Phil Jagielka and Sylvain Distin.

Liverpool looked to utilise Daniel Sturridge’s pace early on with Jordan Henderson’s superb 60-yard crossfield ball into his path surpassed only by Gerrard’s from the opposite diagonal which resulted in Distin clearing the striker’s cross.

Gerrard was making his 36th consecutive league start, equalling his previous longest run set between April 2006 and April 2007, in spite of a long-term shoulder injury.

His further participation became a concern when he crashed to the floor in tangling with Leon Osman, and although he moved gingerly for the next few minutes there was little chance of the Huyton-born midfielder dropping out of this one early.

Everton took their superiority in the table onto the pitch as they had the better of the opening 25 minutes in which they should have taken the lead.

Fellaini had the best chance of the half when he got on the end of Leighton Baines’ 17th-minute free-kick but somehow shot across goal and just wide of the far post from about four yards.

By the half-hour Liverpool had regained their composure and only the excellence of Jagielka, superb throughout, prevented a goal.

First he blocked Gerrard’s shot from Henderson’s cut-back, with the Liverpool FC captain then curling a free-kick just wide, before an even better effort denied Philippe Coutinho just as he was about to pull the trigger.

The slightest error by the Everton captain would have resulted in a penalty or a goal but his timing was immaculate.

Fellaini’s afternoon began to get more frustrating, however, highlighted by him marching towards referee Michael Oliver to demand a free-kick - which was subsequently awarded.

The official was lenient again with the Belgium midfielder by taking no action when he appeared to thrust an arm towards Gerrard’s face as the two tangled.

Coutinho, the mastermind of last week’s 6-0 drubbing of Newcastle, had initially struggled in the frenetic derby atmosphere.

However, early in the second half he played a fine through-ball, but Sturridge could not get round Tim Howard in a one-on-one situation and eventually fired into the side-netting.

Distin had the ball in the next just before the hour from a Baines’ corner only for Oliver to disallow it after the usual pushing and holding in the penalty area, the referee booking Victor Anichebe for dissent.

The Everton FC forward was lucky not to be punished further after an apparent - and pointless - dive midway in Liverpool’s half but, as he had done all game, the official showed leniency.

Coutinho opted for delicacy as opposed to power and lifted a shot well over before Gerrard - after a swift passing exchange with Sturridge - was denied only by Distin’s goalline clearance after the midfielder had gone around Howard.

Anichebe’s deflected shot ballooned up off Lucas Leiva and Jose Reina had to make a late decision to push it away as it threatened to creep inside the post before the match petered out in a goalless draw.

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The Editor

Mark Thoma

Liverpool-born Mark joined the Daily Post in January 2014 after seven years as editor of its Merseyside sister title the Liverpool Post. He started out as a weekly news reporter on Wirral Newspapers, and spent seven years at the Daily Post and Liverpool Echo. He was The Press Association's regional correspondent for North Wales, Merseyside and Cheshire from 1983 to 1997, before returning to the ECHO as deputy news editor. He has won a number of journalism awards, including the UK Press Gazzette Regional Reporter of the Year award, and in 1993 wrote a book on the James Bulger murder.